“Going to study in the US is like a dream for me” says 16 year-old who won the US State Department’s scholarship

Lucknow: “Going to study in the US is like a dream for me, I would have never imagined studying abroad,” says 16 year-old Kashish, who got selected for the US State Department’s Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study (YES) programme scholarship. She leaves for St Louis, Missouri later this week. “It is a great learning opportunity for me and my school has been my biggest support throughout.” Kashish is a Prerna alum, who is currently studying in class 11 at Study Hall School on scholarship. She joined Prerna Girls School in 2009 and later earned a scholarship to study at Study Hall School because of her excellent academic performance. Kashish will be studying at Parkway South High School, in St Louis, Missouri, USA for this academic year. 

Kashish lost her father at the age of five. Her mother, Shashi is a single parent, raising three daughters and works at a women’s self help group, where she makes dry snacks and pickles. “My daughters have made me so proud. Kashish is going to study abroad. All of us are so excited and happy,” says Sahshi. “I dealt with society when they questioned me for not having a son and raising three daughters alone after losing my husband. I was able to send all my daughters to school because of Prerna School. I don’t need a son, I have my daughters”, she adds. 

Rakhee Panjwani, principal, Prerna Girls School (a unit of Study Hall Educational Foundation) says, “This is indeed a very proud moment for our school. Kashish has been one of the brightest students and it is her dedication and hard work that got her selected for the scholarship. We wish her good luck for her journey and hope that she returns more confident and encourages her peers too.”

In the past, 10 girls had been selected from Study Hall Educational Foundation for the YES programme to study in the US. The Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study (YES) programme brings high school students from countries of strategic importance to the United States for an academic year.